Tag Archives: cloud services

You are already backing up your data so you can rebuild it when your server crashes and be up and running in a few hours. But what happens when you lose two servers?…three servers?…four, the network, power, and more? More importantly, are you prepared to continuing running if you lose everything all at once? Disasters happen, more often than you think. Are you prepared? Many organizations have a backup strategy but not a true IT disaster recovery strategy. How long would it take you to get IT back up and running if you lose everything?

So you already have a disaster recovery plan. Have you tested it recently? When was it documented? Updated? If you answered “No” and “It’s been a while,” then your plan may be ineffective. Most organizations don’t have a disaster recovery plan…and those that do may not know how to use it correctly.

The good news is EarthLink Business can help with our new Cloud Disaster Recovery solution. Disaster recovery in the cloud offers companies quick data restoration and effective IT recovery faster than any traditional disaster recovery model. Using the cloud for offsite recovery means your business will have the ability to recover your servers in the cloud environment (as opposed to simply using the cloud for offsite storage). With no capital expenses and subscription pricing, the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) is low. Don’t build it yourself and incur an enormous amount of up front expenses when you could pay an affordable monthly fee and use cloud based servers?

Here are some additional key benefits for utilizing disaster recovery in the cloud:

Data protection: Recovery in the cloud assures your data is recoverable and protected from man-made accidents, power outages, natural disasters, and server crashes.

Scalability and Rapid Implementation: By replicating your primary server environment, the Cloud environment can be quickly scaled to fully replace your primary servers and get your business back up and running in hours, not days.

No hardware requirements. No need for large server rooms and hardware specialists, saving money on power, energy and personnel expenses.

Get some additional sleep at night knowing that your information is safe, secure, and can turned up in a moment’s notice should a disaster strike. Contact your EarthLink Business representative to learn more.

Even with the most advanced technology, the most effective security systems, and best-planned preventative controls, a company’s data will still be at some risk. New and sophisticated cyber-attacks are created every day, with threats coming from profit-motivated criminals, hackers with various agendas, unscrupulous competitors, and even foreign governments.

So perfection is not a possible option. BUT…and here’s the good news: you can get very close.

But you have to approach your cyber-security in an intelligent and systematic way, implementing a strategic array of countermeasures that protect multiple points of vulnerability for your business (e.g., network, servers, desktops, and smartphones). Implemented correctly, you can greatly reduce your security risk to the point that you can feel confident that you can prevent security breaches.

For most organizations, this goal requires an increased level of dedication to security. After all, small and midsize companies typically have few or no resources dedicated to information security. Most of these organizations don’t even have a way of determining how much sensitive information is stored on their systems. And while most businesses do know they need anti-malware tools and a firewall, they don’t fully understand how comprehensive their security measures need to be.

There are 10 key areas that we advise businesses to focus on in order to mitigate information security risks:

1. Security Awareness Training

This is one of the areas companies ignore…at their peril. No, it’s not high-tech. No, it’s not sexy. But security awareness training has the greatest security ROI and highest security impact. It’s true.

So, what should you do? Educate everyone in your company so they can help identify a variety of security risks.

For example, employees should be able to spot and identify email phishing and spoofing attacks. They should also be trained not to store, send or copy sensitive information that’s unencrypted. And they should know not to share sensitive information over the phone unless they are 100% sure of the audience.

Again, our #1 advice to mitigate your security risk: train employees on security policies and practices. And make sure to revisit the issues and retrain at least yearly (sooner if you can).

2. Anti-Virus & Anti-Malware Protection

Virus outbreaks make the news (like the recent Flame virus), so most people know they should have anti-virus and other malware protection for their personal computers. And most people assume businesses are protected. Often they are not. Or at least not adequately protected.

Malware infections can hit your bottom line hard. They can cause fraud, loss of data, identity theft, or decreased companywide productivity due to slow or unusable computers.

Businesses are increasingly adopting an “endpoint security” strategy to combat malware threats. Endpoint security is an information security concept that means that each device (or endpoint) on a network should be responsible for and capable of providing for it’s own security.

Whatever your anti-malware solution, it should scan email for attached viruses, monitor files in real time for infections, and perform thorough scans of every file.

3. Data Encryption

Encrypted data isn’t any less likely to be stolen by hackers or other intruders. But data encryption is still a powerful part of your business’s information security. Encryption protects your data even after it has been accessed. Once it is encrypted, your business data is worthless to the bad guys and remains protected. They would need the encryption key to read your data. So we advise all businesses to encrypt data in case it is compromised or lost (employees leaving unencrypted laptops at airports or coffee shops has caused some serious data breaches).

4. Access Controls

Your business should not be a free-for-all for your employees. When everyone has access to everything, your information security is at risk. For increased security, only give employees (and partners) access to the data they need. This includes both physical and logical access. A good strategy is to start by granting the least privilege. You can then escalate privileges to allow access to unauthorized data on an as-needed basis.

5. Patching

Patching is essential to minimizing the risk to your computer systems. Patches are often released to fix security holes in systems and applications. Make sure you keep all operating systems and applications you run patched. Install the latest firmware updates on all network devices.

6. Mobile Devices

Laptops, smartphones, and tablets have increased the productivity and mobility of today’s workforce. But along with that productivity comes vulnerability. Lost or stolen laptops and other mobile devices are the top cause of data breaches.We recommend you manage endpoints centrally to allow your security policies to be easily deployed.You should also enable auto-lock or require a password to access all devices.

Knowledge is power. In the security realm, monitoring is the knowledge you need to be confident you have powerful protection. Make sure your business is set up to monitor systems and network devices for any abnormalities.

Deploy a SIEM (security incident & event management) that correlates logs form all levels of infrastructure – network, systems, and user activity. Don’t just block activity at a firewall or IPS. Log it, review it and learn from it. Attackers are finding new ways to expose networks. Know what is happening so you can continue to address it.

You should also install content filtering to monitor user activity from within your business. The most common form of employee misuse of the Internet is to surf porn. Another co-worker witnessing this misuse of your company resources can result in legal action and a monetary judgment against your company. Employees also often download or email viruses, causing security breaches. So it is imperative that you need to monitor what your users are doing on the Web.

8. Firewall

A firewall is the first line of defense against any attack (network or host). It acts a barrier between a public network and a private network.

EarthLink offers managed firewalls that are designed to allow good traffic in and to keep malicious traffic out. A majority of firewall breaches are caused by the misconfiguration of firewall rules and policies.

9. Remote Backup

Backup is one of the most neglected areas of computing and therefore typically one of the biggest opportunities your business has to mitigate risk. Why? Because stuff happens. All the time.

Theft, floods, fires, tornadoes, hurricanes, and other unforeseen occurrences can cause large amounts of data loss that can cripple your business.

Often, businesses invest in securing data from hackers or malware, but then the data is physically destroyed by natural causes. If the data doesn’t exist, securing it from outside threats doesn’t matter.

To secure your business you must stay vigilant. There are always bad guys looking for the next way to compromise your business’s information. So you have to perform annual or, better, quarterly vulnerability assessments to identify new risks. The ever-changing security environment is always creating new risks. Identify the new risks that apply to your business and fix them before someone else finds them.

We also recommend that all businesses have a formal Information Security Risk Assessment done every three years, which is the life cycle of most products these days.

If you need more information on security for your business, contact us and one of our IT experts can help you ensure your data is as secure as possible.

Jim Salviski, Vice President of Data Center Solutions for EarthLink Cloud, is a featured guest-columnist in the most recent Open Mic on ibmadison.com, greater Madison, Wisconsin’s online business resource. Jim offers businesses a simple definition of cloud services, and concrete examples of how moving operations to the cloud can save time and money.